He noted Sunday — his 20th anniversary as a priest — had been his final Mass.

“I will not try to fight this irrational and unjust situation for the simple reason that I don’t want to be placed in an adversarial posture against the Church,” Corapi said on the site, on which he called himself the “Black Sheepdog.”

Corapi, of Montana, had been assigned to Texas-based order, the Society of Our Lady of the Most Holy Trinity, which announced his administrative leave March 18.

He said the Bishop William Mulvey of Corpus Christi, whom he identified without mentioning by name, “ordered my superiors, against their will and better judgment, to do it. He in fact threatened to release a reprehensible and libelous letter to all of the bishops if they did not suspend me.”

Corapi acknowledged no wrongdoing in the speech and took lengths to explain that his lawyers, both canon and civil, did not believe he could receive a fair hearing under the church process.

“The identity of the accuser is not revealed,” he wrote. “You can guess, but you don’t actually know. Nor are the exact allegations made known to you. Hence, you have an interesting situation of having to respond to an unknown accuser making unknown accusations (unknown to the accused and his counsel).”